Both Asher Feldman and Peter Youngmeister are proceeding cautiously in broadening MariaDB deployment in our clusters. We have one MariaDB instance for each of the database clusters (s1 to s7). The MariaDB support team has been quick in resolving bugs we encountered along the way. In another database administration task, Asher reviewed and deployed the Wikidata schema changes and migrated it from s3 cluster to s5, adding more growth capacity.

We put sixty new application servers into production in each of the two datacenters. This is in anticipation of expected traffic growth coming from both our regular and mobile sites in the coming year.

Lately we have been experiencing short time-out failures in the nightly search indices built with search-pool4. Asher is experimenting with a fix. He redistributed the search-pool4 indices in the Tampa data center based on sizes and what seems to be a more acceptable index size-to-ram ratio. We essentially have a virtual search-pool5 shard, but with the spelling and highlight indices for pool4 and pool5 sharing the same servers. The pool4 wikis are using the new setup in Tampa, with everything else continuing to use our Ashburn cluster. We should know soon if it works.

The TechOps team had a in-person team meeting the week of 25th February in WMF's San Francisco office.

The highlights of the meeting were:

Discuss the upkeep of the "failover" datacenter and capture the lessons learned from the recent datacenter switchover. For example, we think we could reduce the switchover "readonly" time from 32 minutes to 10 minutes by automating more of the database and caching failover procedures.

Organize a coordinated sprints process to fill the gap between smaller tasks (for which we use the RT ticketing system) and larger tasks (which require department coordination) by collecting some thoughts. We started brainstorming and forming teams via the Projects wikitech page.

Face-to-face meetings with the Engineering teams from Platform, Mobile, Analytics and Wikidata.

Numerous bug fixes were made to the mwxml2sql tool, and a set of SQL files bsed on an English language Wikipedia XML dump was published for use by testers [1]. A tool to convert SQL dumps to escaped tab-delimited format is now available for use with MySQL's LOAD DATA INFILE command, much faster than INSERTs. All SQL fles from the same dump were converted to this format and also published.

A new mirror has come on line, initially mirroring historical archives of XML files as well as MediaWiki releases, page view statistics and other files [2]. Thanks to Robert Smith and Wansecurity.com for providing the resources to make this happen.

This month was mostly spent stabilizing Labs components. Labs Ganglia was fixed to report instance statistics properly. Adminbot was updated to fix utf8 issues, and to fix package issues when upgrading. A number of changes were made to the glusterfs support to bring more stability. Gluster was upgraded to 3.3.1 to fix a memory leak on both the client and server. Gluster isn't matching our use case of multitenancy, as the glusterd daemon isn't handling the large number of volumes well. To help with this, until we either fix the issue in gluster, or replace it, we've made a change to not create/manage Gluster volumes for projects unless they opt in. We've also disabled and deleted Gluster volumes for projects that are currently unused. Work was done to turn Puppet classes for installing MediaWiki in Labs into modules, so that they can be reused more easily.

We merged wikitech.wikimedia.org (our operations and infrastructure documentation) and labsconsole.wikimedia.org together into wikitech.wikimedia.org. wikitech-static.wikimedia.org is available as a backup, in case all access to our cluster is unavailable. Work was started on supporting saltstack reactors, to replace the bootstrapping for instance creation. This month we have new member of the Labs team, Marc-Andre Pelletier, also known in the community as Coren. Coren will be working on the new Tool Labs infrastructure and we're very excited to have him on-board. Asher and Peter started work on replicated databases for Tool Labs during the last week of the month.

In February, the team worked on improving the design, user interface components and API infrastructure of VisualEditor, preparing for the new features that will be added in the coming months. The objective is for VisualEditor to be the default editor for all users, capable of letting them edit the majority of content without needing to use the wikitext editor, in July 2013. This will mean adding support for references, (at least) basic templates, categories and images, each of which is a very large piece of work. During this time, the team has expanded with the recruitment of Ed Sanders, who will focus on the data infrastructure of VisualEditor's platform. The alpha version of VisualEditor on mediawiki.org and the English Wikipedia was updated twice (1.21-wmf9 and -wmf10), adding support for Microsoft Internet Explorer (version 9 and above), fixing a number of bugs reported by the community, improving internationalisation, and restructuring the data model layer so that the code interfaces are ready for the new features.

The Parsoid team continued to improve support for non-English wikis. This involved exposing more configuration information through the MediaWiki API and using it throughout Parsoid. The support is now reasonably complete, but needs testing. The round-trip testing framework needs to be adapted to support running tests on pages from multiple wikis.

The tokenizer was modified to parse one top-level block at a time, which helps to spread out API requests and minimize the number of tokens in flight. The serializer is in the process of being rewritten to work on DOM input to benefit from the context provided by the DOM. This rewrite is expected to simplify the logic significantly, and help fix some more selective serialization issues that are blocking a deployment to production.

This month, we continued development on the Notifications project (code-named Echo), which is now being tested on mediawiki.org. Ryan Kaldari and Benny Situ developed new features such as bundling, dismiss and web preferences, as well as refactored the code for the fly-out, archive page and email notifications. Luke Welling continued to develop a more robust job queue. Fabrice Florin spearheaded discussions about notifications for both new and experienced users, and updated requirements for this first set notifications for our upcoming release. We will develop these notifications and final features in coming weeks, and are aiming for a first release on the English Wikipedia next month; in the meantime, you can help us test the current version on mediawiki.org. To learn more, read this project update on the Wikimedia blog. If you are a software engineer, check out this job opening to join our team and develop more editor engagement projects like Echo.

In February, we analyzed and collated user research concerning talk pages. Early designs were shown to members of the Board of Trustees to ask for their input. Jeff Atwood (from StackOverflow and Discourse) came in to give us a brain dump of his work. Design work was done on secondary "modules" as examples for how existing workflows can be rebuilt within the Flow system. Community engagement strategies saw the beginnings of implementation with the creation of a "Portal" that will engage discussion about Flow at three locations (mediawiki.org, meta, and the English Wikipedia).

In February, the Editor Engagement Experiments team ("E3") continued working toward completing its goals for the quarter ending in March, which includes updates on the following projects.

After the intial launch of guided tours, Matt Flaschen and other team members worked on A/B testing the effectiveness of guided tours as part of the onboarding new Wikipedians experiences currently enabled on English Wikipedia. Results from these controlled tests are vital to understanding the impact of tours on editor engagement. In the meantime, the GuidedTour extension was enabled on Wikimedia Commons and six Wikipedias (including French, German, and Dutch), so that local administrators and volunteer developers could take advantage of the feature.

In addition to working on polishing and quantifying the effect of guided tours, significant progress was made on a new landing page for the onboarding project, with plans to launch early in March. The new Getting Started page will be expanded to include a wider variety task types offered to new editors. It will also be generated from a basic recommender system coupled with the GettingStarted extension, rather than relying on a bot.

Kirsten Menger-Anderson joined the team as Technical Writer mid-month. She began work with Ori Livneh, Dario Taraborelli, and others on documenting the EventLogging extension, with the goal of producing a comprehensive guide for end users of EventLogging, especially other Wikimedia Engineering teams in need of data. Future work by Kirsten will include similar documentation of the User Metrics data analysis API, which will be opened up for internal use in March.

The majority of February was spent paying down the more glaring examples of technical debt we acquired during the 2012 English fundraiser, before jumping straight into a whole new round of International fundraising that kicked off on February 27th at approximately 15:00 UTC (7am PST). Due to unforeseen problems with one of our payment gateways, we were forced to scrap our plans for a continuous international fundraising effort spanning March through June, and will instead attempt to raise as much of the remaining budget in March as we are able. All other plans have been precluded by the March fundraising efforts.

Translate (TUX) enhancements: Development continues full steam ahead on the new translation editor with proof reading feature by Santhosh and Amir. Niklas continues to enhance and test backend translate infrastructure, including Solr integration and other translation aids.

Plurals support: by Santhosh and Amir to be more consistent with CLDR standards.

Technical Font Specification for Indic scripts: We kicked off this collaborative project between Red Hat and Wikimedia at the Language Summit in February. Santhosh and Runa are contributors to this project.

Language Coverage Matrix: This matrix aims to provide an up-to-date status of language support for all tools that the team is developing and maintaining.

Mediawiki i18n code review: Team continues to support Mediawiki release with i18n code reviews across other features and extensions.

February saw numerous beta releases of the Commons iOS and Android app. The Android app was published to Google's Play store with a Beta label. Brion Vibber announced for testers to get envolved in http://tflig.ht/Zl9Ef7. A significant amount of time was spent on the visual polish, bug fixing, and internationalization in prep for a very active series of betas. Extensive work was also done to log specific user actions using E3's EventLogging setup to help us make data driven decisions in the future.

During February, we launched with a new partner, Orange Botswana. We've also begun testing with Vimpelcom for an upcoming launch in March. In addition, we've made improvements to the partner dashboard which tracks Wikipedia Zero usage.

Tomasz Finc, Max Semenik and Arthur Richards worked on organising the OSM hackathon which took place on March 9-10 in Copenhagen. Max Semenik continued working on OSM in Labs and uploaded initial versions of several OSM-related packages to Gerrit for Operations to review.

Gerrit was upgraded this month to a pre-2.6 snapshot. This enabled the use of plugins, as well as brought numerous bugfixes and UI improvements. Work is underway on a plugin to provide Bugzilla integration and to replace Gitweb with a better repository viewer called Gitblit. All of our git repositories are now automatically replicated to GitHub. We've begun some initial planning into how we can improve the "new repository request" process, making it much easier for users with a quicker turnaround time.

Jan Gerber continues to work part-time for the WMF to fix multimedia bugs. Fixes include better support for FLAC files (bug 43249) and better support for metadata display in small embedded players (bug 44272). Nearly all files have been copied from Swift (in Tampa) to Ceph (in Ashburn). Further scripts will be run to synchronize the Ceph files to account for deletions and updates to files. The Varnish configuration to handle URL rewriting (to take the place of rewrite.py in swift) is already coded, though not yet in use.

A patch to allow moving the job queue to another DB cluster has been merged, and another patch to support an alternative Redis-based queue is in review in gerrit. Currently, job-related operations consume a significant portion of production database master wall time.

The team worked on a number of areas this month. The interface for Stewards to mass-lock user accounts was completed and will be deployed very soon next month. The support for global AbuseFilters nears completion, with a test deployment to test.wikipedia.org and mediawiki.org; once internationalisation is more complete, it will be deployed for all wikis. The team worked to agree a specification for a global CheckUser tool. Progress was made on a global account renaming tool and XFF-based global and local blocks. The team also worked on finalising the migration to Single User Login, building some metrics to ascertain a sense of the problem.

Yuri started gathering requirements for the RESTful (content-oriented) API as part of the overall planning for the API v2.0 roadmap. Also, Wikia's focused R&D sprint has led to remove all the remaining obstacles identified previously and Wikia has identified a new, larger dedicated Product team to get to a final implementation of the REST API following the directions set by the existing prototype and internal RFC; the team (API/Data) is the same one in charge of Search and all the related API's, this will ensure a better integration of this product into the new API strategy. At the moment of writing the knowledge transfer required for the team to start this new phase has just begun and the team has to first to complete the current work on another project already in progress. In the meantime, Wikia will make an RFC public for review and feedback.

Antoine Musso worked with several MediaWiki extension authors to ensure that the unit tests for those extensions are run by Jenkins and that they work. He hopes to have all extensions that run on the Wikimedia production cluster fully operational by the end of February. Antoine also integrated PHP CodeSniffer into our automated test runs.

Valerie published an initial version of a Bug Life Cycle flowchart describing the life of a bug report by its status changes over time, continued investigating feedback channels and workflows of other bigger free software projects, and also helped testing the Commons Upload app for Android and the mobile browser as part of Mobile QA testing. A table on Bugzilla use by development teams was made available.

Furthermore, reachout to several development teams continued to better understand the different bug management needs, and discussions took place about a workflow how to mark fixed tickets as backport candidates in the issue tracker, potentially resulting in the addition of a dropdown menu ("flag") in Bugzilla.

The Outreach Program for Women is more than half-way. Our six participants are fairly on track; read February reports from Valerie, Mariya, Priyanka and Sucheta. Teresa is working on unit tests for the Git repository extension and is looking at a request to use this extension to help to maintain CentralNotice-related content. Isarra completed her work on Flow/User tests and now is working with the Editor Engagement team on improvements to the Watchlist design. Google published the timeline for the Summer of Code 2013 and we have confirmed our intention to apply as organization. Without big announcements and more than a month before any deadline, we have already 15 students, 5 mentors and 2 org admins potentially interested.

Guillaume Paumier finished setting up the Project:Calendar, used it to replace content on pages like QA/Weekly goals and Meetings using selective transclusion, created an edit notice to make it easier to add and edit events, added a bullet list display option, and added links to icons credits as part of an effort to harmonize visual identity for MediaWiki. He updated the monthly report how-to to reflect the current process, and met with LCA staff to discuss possible collaboration between the tech ambassadors and community advocates programs. While in San Francisco, he met with many colleagues to discuss engineering project documentation, and ways to announce to and engage with the rest of the community. Last, he started to create a Product development hub to facilitate the involvement of contributors, and supported the engineering team in communicating about their accomplishments on the Wikimedia Tech blog.

The (newly elected) Affiliations Committee is working on finding an agreement with MediaWiki Group Ahmedabad and Wikimedia India regarding whether it should be a chapter Special Interest Groups, a user group, or some other structure.

We have migrated our source code repository from Subversion to Git. We have have also focused in February on the revamping of the Kiwix Web site. The new Web site is really more user friendly. Audience continues to grow with 120,000 downloads of the software in February.

In February the first phase of Wikidata (language links) was deployed on the English-language Wikipedia. Additionally the first parts of phase 2 (infoboxes) went life on wikidata.org. It is now possible to add statements. For an example see d:159. The first tools have already been written on top of this, for example Geneawiki and Reasonator. In the meantime more work has been put into additional data-types, like strings and geocoordinates, as well as the foundations of phase 3 (lists based on queries).

The engineering management team continues to update the Deployments page weekly, providing up-to-date information on the upcoming deployments to Wikimedia sites, as well as the engineering roadmap, listing ongoing and future Wikimedia engineering efforts.